Westhill House Highgate Consulting Rooms Sleep Therapy Can Change Bad Memories - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Westhill House Highgate Consulting Rooms Sleep Therapy Can Change Bad Memories

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Westhill House Highgate Consulting Rooms is located in West Hill House, a quiet building in Swain's Lane, set back from the road. Swain's Lane is one of Highgate's most charming streets. It is within 50 metres of Hampstead Heath and with easy access to bus, train and underground. Local restaurants and cafés add to the friendly, village atmosphere. We’ve had no complaints. CONTINUE READING: REFERENCES: – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Westhill House Highgate Consulting Rooms Sleep Therapy Can Change Bad Memories


1
Westhill House Highgate Consulting Rooms Sleep
Therapy Can Change Bad Memories
2
  • Westhill House Highgate Consulting Rooms is
    located in West Hill House, a quiet building in
    Swain's Lane, set back from the road. Swain's
    Lane is one of Highgate's most charming streets.
    It is within 50 metres of Hampstead Heath and
    with easy access to bus, train and underground.
    Local restaurants and cafés add to the friendly,
    village atmosphere. Weve had no complaints.

3
  • Many of our consulting rooms are rented to
    professional and alternative medical specialists.
    From holistic therapies from SE Asian countries
    such as Bangkok Thailand, Jakarta Indonesia and
    many more.
  • Sleep Therapy Can Change Bad Memories

4
  • Forget the psychiatrists couch. Your own bed
    could one day be a setting for psychotherapy.
    Targeted brain training during sleep can lessen
    the effects of fearful memories, according to a
    study published today in Nature Neuroscience.
    Researchers say that the technique could
    ultimately be used to treat psychiatric
    disorders, such as phobias and post-traumatic
    stress disorders.

5
  • Today, those conditions are most commonly treated
    using exposure therapy, which requires patients
    to intentionally relive their fears. With
    repeated exposures in the safety of a therapists
    consulting room, patients can learn to reduce
    their responses to traumatic cues suggesting
    that memories are being altered.

6
  • But the treatment itself can be intolerably
    painful for some patients, especially at first.
    In the latest study, neuroscientist Katherina
    Hauner and her colleagues at the Feinberg School
    of Medicine at Northwestern University in
    Chicago, Illinois, devised a form of exposure
    therapy that works while people snooze.

7
  • Its fascinating, and very promising, says
    Daniela Schiller, a neuroscientist at Mount Sinai
    School of Medicine in New York. We used to think
    you need awareness and conscious understanding of
    your emotional responses in order to change
    them.

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  • Continue Reading
  • http//www.calameo.com/read/003275588b739ee348488
  • REFERENCES
  • http//www.consulting-rooms.co.uk/index.php?option
    com_contentviewarticleid2Itemid3
  • http//www.consulting-rooms.co.uk/index.php?option
    com_contentviewarticleid1Itemid2
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